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Friday, January 13, 2017

The Beauty of God's Work: Dinosaur Ridge

Susan Fox 
by Susan Fox 

Colorado has more dinosaur footprints than anywhere else in the world. Dinosaur Ridge outside Denver is one of those prehistoric clusters. The irony is that the exposed ancient beach is now high in the Rocky Mountains!
  





Let us go to the Front Range!
An elemental air gusts fresh as a savage surf. 
A cold gale has stirred up all the beauty of time. 
Taken on a wind, I climb an ancient seaside
in a mundane mobile coach powered by pistons. 

Smell the ancient salt shore.
Hear the cry of the hoary goliaths  — 
                        dinosaurs marching in parade! 
Once in their living glory... 
now a cavalcade in extinction — evidence preserved in the Rockies.
Dinosaur footprints at Dinosaur Ridge, Denver, Colorado

I sing of a merciless existence, fierce and true
hulking feet sucking in the mud, 
cries of mountainous brutes,
dancing by the low sea high in the Rockies.

“We were here! We spun, strutted, swayed and danced!”
We capered along the shore!
It was life!” 
Now who would believe it? 
Who would imagine He (peaking from Outside Time) could capture their feet
on a lofty once aquatic peak? 
Behold! God’s polaroid shines. 

I am here! I am alive!
I would run on the beach with the beasts.
Feet sucking into the same mud. 
Fantastic cries echoing down the eons.

Smell the antediluvian coast:
A duck-billed brute issues from a dense jungle, 
driving palm fronds, flowering monocots and mangrove leaves from his path. 
I love the squishy sand and the tropical breeze now on Colorado’s cold prehistoric sea! 

I will walk with the duck-billed dinosaur,
while he frolics on the shore,
snorting, thundering, hollering for his kind
— followed by 
               a crafty Tyrannosaurus.

These brutes relished the shore that God raised to the sky. 
Their hope was in the briny sun:
the glorious feast scattered about the beach. 

Now the waterfront is frozen, and they are done; 
running no more, 
leaving only prints of their wandering feet,
leaving not a single wave, not one tropical tree,
leaving me no place to run — 
with dinosaurs by the sea.

Instead, I must labor up a rocky path alone
examining their footprints in stone 
and then return home
in a smelly motorised and moving bundle
running on the remains of a prehistoric jungle.






Monday, January 9, 2017

Epiphany! Despite the Confusion of Our Times, He Will Rule With Justice and Truth!

Sermon by Rev. John Paul Shea
The Epiphany of the Lord, Jan 8, 2017
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish, Tucson, AZ
Today the Church celebrates the awesome celebration of the Epiphany. 

In Ancient Greek, the word for Epiphany is theophany, meaning "vision of God." This was the word used to describe Moses' experience
on Mount Sinai when God gave him the Ten Commandments. There was a fiery flame, reaching to the sky with loud notes of a trumpet! The whole mountain -- wrapped in smoke -- trembled violently! People at the bottom of the mountain trembled in fear.

In today’s Gospel (Matt 2: 1-12), we hear of  epiphany in a different way. It is in the form of a mysterious star. 

The Magi, who were astrologers or what we would call “wise men,” had their eyes fixed in
the heavens looking for the signs of God, which they recognised through a star. 

Even though the Magi were pagans, this star led them to Jesus Christ Light of the World and True King to come.  The Magi opened their hearts to honor the One True God by offering Him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.

Today we celebrate the manifestation of God in our world. Jesus Christ is the True Light and True King who will rule of all the Nations in justice and truth.

Therefore, today’s celebration calls us to rejoice! Today’s first reading (Is 60:1-6) says, “Rise up in splendor, Jerusalem! Your light has come… Nations shall walk by your light, and kings by your shining radiance… for the riches of the sea shall be emptied out before you, the wealth of nations shall be brought to you. Caravans of camels shall fill you, dromedaries from Midian and Ephah; all from Sheba shall come bearing gold and frankincense, and proclaiming the praises of the LORD!”

Let us hear these words of Isaiah! Let us rise
up in spender! Let us proclaim the praises of the Lord! For our Light has come! 

Today’s story reveals another side to the story. There is another individual who wants to be led to Our Lord Jesus Christ. This is King Herod. 

Although the Magi could see the star of our Lord, King Herod could not. Herod could not see past his own desire for power and control. For, the same child, Jesus, that the Magi honoured is the same child that Herod sought to  kill for political gain.

Therefore, Herod, in a sense, represents the dark obstacles that even today seek to prevent the kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Herod can be seen as a player in the battle between good and evil.

This is a cosmic battle. As Saint Paul says in his letter to the Ephesians, “Our struggle is not with flesh and blood, but with the principalities, with the powers, with the world rulers of this present darkness, with the evil spirits in the heavens.” (Ephesians 6:10-12)
 
Fr. John Paul Shea
My brothers and sister,  there are all sorts of things that will blind us from recognizing the presence of Our Lord --  materialism,  pornography,  pride,  the desire for money. When we get caught up in the things of the world, then we become blind to the ways in which God is leading us. We become blind to His Star of Truth.

In fact, the guiding star for us is our Church  and her teachings. Let us read the Catechism. Let us know the truth! 

God has also has given us our Blessed Mother. She also is our guiding star. If we devote ourselves to Mary, She always leads
us to Her Son. She always points us in the right direction.

In fact, in our time today, as we await the second coming of Our Lord in all His glory, we need to call upon the protection of our Blessed Mother more than ever! She calls us to repentance and conversion, and to pray the Rosary  because so many souls are being lost.

We have now have begun a new year. It is a very critical time. Do not underestimate our Blessed Mother’s call. We live in a time  of  confusion. Even in our Church, the consequences of sin are denied. 

The final battle between light and darkness is
Exodus, another theophany 
already upon us. 

As we celebrate the Epiphany, let us focus our hearts on the Light. Let us be led by His star. “For darkness covers the earth, and thick clouds cover the peoples; but upon [us] the LORD shines, and over [us] appears his glory.” 

Hold firm to our faith so that we may have the protection of obedience and be guided by the Light of Christ at all times. Amen!
Transfiguration, another theophany

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Epiphany! You Are Invited to the Feast of All Nations!

Sermon by Fr. Joseph Mungai
The Epiphany of the Lord, Jan 8, 2017
Immaculate Heart Mary and Christ the King  Catholic Parishes, Louisville, Kentucky, U.S.A.
"Where is the newborn king of the Jews? We saw his star at its rising and have come to do Him homage." (The Magi inquired of King Herod, Matt 2:2)

One day a young man sought a holy monk in Egypt, who happened to be quite muscular and burly. The young man asked: "Oh, holy man, I want to know how to find God." 

The monk replied, "Do you really want to find God?" The young man answered: "Yes, I do." So the monk took the young man down to the river. Suddenly, the monk grabbed the young man by the neck and held his head under water. At first the young man thought the monk was giving him a special baptism. But  after one minute, the monk didn’t let go and the young man began struggling. Second by second, the young man fought harder and harder. After three minutes, the monk pulled the young man out of the water and said: "When you desire God as much as you desired air, you will have the Epiphany of God"

Today the Church celebrates the Solemnity of the Epiphany -- a Greek word meaning "appearance or manifestation." We celebrate today the manifestation of Our Lord to the

whole world. After He was made known to the shepherds keeping watch outside Bethlehem, he is now revealed to the Magi, who have come from the East to adore Him. 

Epiphany is the Feast of all Nations because on this day we celebrate the manifestation of
Christ, the true Light of all nations, calling us
to become more and more filled with His Light, to clothe our  communities with the universality of this Light and to labour to bring the Light to those living in darkness.

In age of electricity and artificial lights, it is difficult for us to appreciate the symbolism of light; but the truth is that Christ as Light is the fullest expression of God's work in the world.

Therefore "Arise, shine!" cries out Isaiah, "for your light has come and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you." We Gentiles thank God that
today we are being invited to God's Kingdom, his Church, which is our means to reach heaven. 

Unlike the people of the Old Testament, let us not forget how God is so good to us. Let us not provoke Him, so we end up in exile as slaves to pagans. Whatever challenges you and I may go through in life let them not cause us to be unfaithful to God. We do not want to be excluded from our true home -- where "the glory of the Lord will shine" forever.

The Epiphany is a festival of light, for on this

day we celebrate the manifestation of Jesus Christ in the darkness of the world calling all humankind to come and bathe in His Light. 

At the birth of Jesus, three wise men from the East, guided by a star came to worship him. It is a custom to picture them as black, white and brown; thus they represent all the people of the earth, particularly the Gentiles. Hence, "This mystery is that through the gospel the Gentiles are heirs together with Israel, members together of one body and sharers together in the promise in Christ Jesus." (Eph 3:6)

This makes us to rejoice for we appreciate the gift of true faith. This gift means that we know where we came from, we know where we are going and we are certain that that is a wonderful eternal place.  Holding onto our faith and following the right path, we also know the Way there. We may have to climb some hills that look as steep as Calvary, but after Calvary comes the Mount of the Ascension. Yes Epiphany is the feast of all Nations.
The Magi are the central personages in today's feast. They were pagans who did not know the true God of the Jews. Yet  God revealed to them that the promised King of the Israel had come.

They came to Jerusalem, the capital of Judah, expecting to find the whole country rejoicing. Instead they found suspicion and hatred in the reigning king -- a hatred which in a few days turned to murder. 

Among the religious leaders they found knowledge of their past history. These leaders knew that the Messiah would be born in Bethlehem. They recognised that the Magi were very sure  the foretold Messiah had come.  In spite of all that, the thought of going to Bethlehem with the Magi never occurred to them. We too know the true facts concerning Christ, His mission and His present and future kingdom. Like the leaders of the Jews of his day, we also can become absorbed in the affairs of the world -- the quest for wealth, pleasure and power. We can become so totally absorbed in worldly affairs that we have no time to welcome Christ into our homes and hearts as Our True Lord.

We are baptised so we have the entire Light of Christ, but too often we think that is enough. The strange thing about Jesus is that

you can never get away from Him, but also you can never get enough of Him. 

Jesus Christ is  everything man needs. Therefore until God meets all our deepest needs, our quest for more and more of Jesus must go on. Meet Jesus daily. We need not look towards the stars to encounter Him. He is being born every day in our lives. He comes anew to us in every suffering we face, in every hand stretched out to us for help.

The Lord comes to us in the Sacraments, especially the Eucharist. He comes in the community of believers -- the universality of Christ. Hence it has to be a community that welcomes all peoples and races, that provides equality for all, especially the "little ones."

The more we Christians receive the Light of Christ,
 the more we want to give it to others.
People may appear to be seeking fame, fortune, exitement, but what they actually want is human fulfilment. Their search is for what is supreme and beautiful -- Jesus Christ. 

So we Christians have a  a lot of work to do. After Christmas there are already signs on the streets that work has resumed, sales have started, and schools have re-opened. The "back to work" motif is noticeable. 

Today's feast also calls us to bring Christ to all nations. "When the song of the angels is stilled, when the star in the sky is gone, when the kings and princes are home, when the shepherds are back with the flock, the work of Christmas begins: to find the lost, to heal the broken, to feed the hungry, to build the nations and to make music in the heart." (Anonymous)  God bless you all.

Today's Readings:  Is 60:1-6, Eph 3: 2-3, 5-6, Matt 2: 1-12